After prolonged invalidation, validation can feel essential. Being believed, understood, and affirmed can bring immediate relief and a sense of orientation.
Validation is not a weakness. It often meets a real and legitimate need.
The difficulty arises when validation becomes the primary way reality is established.
Why validation is so powerful after abuse
Narcissistic abuse often involves chronic questioning of perception, memory, and intention. Validation restores a sense of sanity.
Early in recovery, validation can:
- counteract gaslighting
- reduce shame
- stabilise perception
- interrupt self-blame
At this stage, it can be profoundly regulating.
When validation starts to create problems
Validation can begin to backfire when it becomes necessary to feel settled.
Common signs include:
- needing repeated confirmation of the same conclusions
- distress when others do not agree
- seeking reassurance before trusting decisions
- increased anxiety after conversations rather than relief
In these cases, validation may be reinforcing uncertainty rather than resolving it.
External certainty versus internal orientation
Validation supports recovery best when it helps you return to your own perception — not replace it.
When certainty remains external, the nervous system does not fully relearn trust in itself. It stays dependent on consensus.
This can feel safer in the short term, but it limits long-term integration.
A shift that often helps
Many survivors benefit from gradually shifting the function of validation:
- from “Tell me I’m right”
- to “Help me clarify what I already know”
This preserves support while strengthening internal reference points.
Validation that supports regulation
Validation tends to be most helpful when it:
- names patterns rather than adjudicating facts
- reflects impact rather than intent
- does not pressure decisions
- allows disagreement without destabilisation
It becomes less helpful when it functions as proof.
Closing
If validation feels both relieving and unsettling, it does not mean you are doing something wrong. It often means you are in the process of transferring authority back to yourself.
Over time, the need for validation usually softens — not because it was wrong, but because it has done its job.